Trish, I agree about the Dresner book. There are things I do not appear to need, and other things which appear to be left out, or at least are not explained when I need them to be. Having said that, writing such a book must be incredibly difficult. David -----Original Message----- From: ebooktalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ebooktalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Trish Talbot Sent: 30 October 2013 16:49 To: ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [ebooktalk] Re: me and my I-Pad Many thanks for the lesson, teacher. Seriously, that was all very useful, or it will be once I can connect to my wi fi network. I have had many attempts at putting in the password as I remember it, but the iphone is refusing to accept it. Help, in the form of my brother, is coming this weekend, so then I should be able to start properly. By the way, you're right, taptap see is free. I am finding the Dresner/Martineau book, and the update, rather long-winded and it seems to start with things I don't feel the need to know. Does anyone else find that, or am I just being impatient? Trish. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ian Macrae" <ian.macrae1@xxxxxxx> To: <ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Wednesday, October 30, 2013 9:27 AM Subject: [ebooktalk] Re: me and my I-Pad All of the below should also be useful to Trish with her iPhone. Hi Dave and congratulations on your purchase. Alison has covered increasing and decreasing reading speed but you need to be aware that this will also alter the speed at which the voice gives you all other information relating to the iPad. And because the books are read by Voiceover, not by a different TTS engine, yes, you can read all books text enabled or not, so ya boo sucks to those miserable publishers who tried to stop us. Next apps. In my experience it's best to buy the apps from the device for which they're intended. This is usually done by going into the app store double tapping the search button and then entering either the name of an app or the subject you want apps for. So you might, for instance, do a search for :"Radio". However, I think I can save you some time there. I'd strongly suggest getting the BBC iPlayer Radio app as this allows you to listen to all BBC networks and local stations and the latest version of it also helps you build up your podcast library. For a wider variety of stations beyond the BBC, indeed, for stations across the world in many different genres, I'd recommend Tune-In Radio. There are two versions. the basic one is free and that allows you to build up a list of favourite stations from a well laid out list of genres or localities. Tune-In Radio Pro is, I think, a couple of quid and its main advantage is that it allows you to record output from the stations you've selected. I'm pretty sure Tap Tap see is free, but you will always be asked for your iTunes user name and password even when downloading free apps. One other you might want to look at is MBraille. This produces a virtual Braille keyboard on the screen which then enables you input text for messages or tweets in Grade 2. The simple version which allows texting and tweeting is free. The more Copley one in which you can also do emails and notes and some other stuff is around twenty-five quid. I've still not committed to buying the full version. In addition to all of these you should also get the BBC iPlayer app, different from iPlayer Radio. this means you can stream and download TV shows and stream radio shows for as long as they're up there. Downloads are not permanent, they stay on your iPad for around 30 days. I watch hardly any television except via my iPad now. That, for instance, is how I caught up with the recent Nick Jones programme. One good reason for having a case is that it means you can read books from your Kindle app on the go without the reading being interrupted by accidental touching of the screen. Some cases, however, also lock the screen which means that reading stops all together. When reading you also need to lock the orientation of your screen in portrait. To do this you bring up the control centre by going to the status bar right at the top of the screen then doing a three finger swipe up to bring up the control centre. Once in there, find Orientation and turn the lock on by double tapping. This method assumes your iPad is on IOS7. You can find this out by going into settings/general/about. right, this has been very long but I hope it's useful. Good luck with the device and keep the questions coming. On 29 Oct 2013, at 23:03, David Russelll wrote: > Hi all > > The I-Pad is up and running. Not really done much with it as yet, but my > friend who helped me with the setting up did put the kindle app on for me. > I have managed to load two books, using my pc to purchase the books. Am I > correct in thinking that I should be able to read the books which are not > speech enabled? Also how do I decrease or more likely increase the > reading > speed. > > Next question is how to find apps. I want to get a good app for radio > stations and also the tap tap see app. Do I have to purchase those or are > they free and where do I find them? Is it easier to find apps on the pc > and > transfer them to the ipad, if that is possible. > > Last question for now is do ipad and iphone users use screen protectors or > a > special case, and if so any recommendations would be of assistance. > > All for now folks. > > > David > >